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Synopsis

Nurse Anne Graham is tried and acquitted of murder when an elderly private patient who had willed her some money dies. The patient had used Anne’s key to the medicine cabinet to gain access to some tablets which had poisoned her. Following the trial Anne finds it difficult to gain new employment. On returning home one day she finds that a newspaper has been posted to her with an advert for a nursing position ringed. Though having doubts Anne applies for the job using an assumed name. Her application is successful and she goes to work for the Bentley’s, nursing Edward Bentley who is an invalid. Tracy, the butler of the household, had been in attendance at Anne’s trial, and he and Mrs Bentley have employed Anne with the intention of her taking the blame when they poison the husband. Stephen Farringdon, Anne’s defence counsel, sees her when he is visiting the small town where she now resides and strikes up a relationship with her. When Mr Bentley dies and Anne is arrested for murder, Stephen is convinced of her innocence and takes on her defence again. —NFA

Director

Original

Carol Reed

At the end of the 1930s, Carol Reed was regarded as one of the most promising young directors in England; at the end of the 1940s, he was the maker of one of the most popular and critically acclaimed movies of the decade, the most prominent director working in England, and the most lionized British director this side of Alfred Hitchcock, and the world was knocking at his door. During the 1950s, he became the first movie director ever to be awarded a knighthood, and he closed out the 1960s with one of the very few blockbuster musicals of its time to earn a profit or filmmaking honors, in between and around those triumphs lay a life and career worthy of a movie. Carol Reed was born into a family with some of the best artistic/theatrical credentials of any film director who ever lived. His father was Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1853-1917), the leading actor of his day and, among many other credits, the stage’s first Henry Higgins, and his mother was Tree’s mistress, May Pinney Reed. Born… read more

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